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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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UK health minister: Get booster jabs or face Christmas restrictions

Sajid Javid

Sajid Javid says the UK is facing a 'challenging winter'
The health secretary has urged elderly and vulnerable people to get their COVID-19 booster jabs "as soon as you can" to help avoid restrictions being imposed over Christmas.

Around 30% of people aged over 80 and 40% of over-50s in England are yet to receive a top-up jab of the coronavirus vaccine, according to the Department of Health.

Three million more people in England are being invited to have a booster shot next week - and Sajid Javid said he "strongly urges" everybody eligible for the jab to take up the offer.

Comment: Also see:


Bullseye

Five lessons from this week's US elections, including one Trump surprise

Trump and hats
© Reuters/Gaelen Morse
Former US President Donald Trump
What have we learnt from the results in Virginia, New Jersey, and elsewhere, and what do they herald for the upcoming midterms and the 2024 presidential race?

With roughly a year to go until the midterm elections, it's time to look at the top five takeaways from the 2021 election cycle in the wake of Republican victories in Virginia and beyond.

Takeaway No.1: The Democrats are not in touch with voters on most issues.

This takeaway is either a no-brainer or a dastardly lie, depending on where you fall on the ideological scale.

Conservatives, who always think Democrats are out of touch with normal American values, will likely feel vindicated. Progressives, on the other hand, will argue it wasn't the ideas or policies proposed by Democrats that were at fault, but the execution of policies and the inability of moderates in the party to embrace more radical, revolutionary proposals such as defunding the police, or the New Green Deal.

We'll get into the specifics of policies in a second, but the magnitude of the losses seem to indicate that, whatever the Democrats are arguing for, the country isn't buying. It's not like the Democrats just lost one race in Virginia; they lost a lot of races in Virginia - and elsewhere.

Attention

Orban's uniting Europe's Right. That's a problem for Brussels

Le Pen/Orban
© Reuters
Marine Le Pen • Hungarian PM Viktor Orban
Budapest, Hungary
Hungary's Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, has long been a stone in Brussels' shoe, but a dispute over funding for his Trump-style southern border wall could see him become even more problematic for Ursula von der Leyen and her Eurocrats.

As if the European Union did not have enough problems with its disputes over Brexit and arguments with Poland, now up pops Hungarian PM Viktor Orban like an inconvenient jack-in-the-box to throw yet more fuel on the roaring fire of discontent.

Orban's latest gripe with Brussels, and to be fair there are many, is that the bloc is refusing to reimburse Hungary for the construction of a wall on its southern border. The Hungarian government sanctioned the building of the wall back in 2015, as a response to the migrant crisis that was engulfing Europe. The initial intention was to prevent Hungary being used as a corridor for the deluge of migrants attempting to make their way west.

At the time, the Hungarian government made it clear to the migrants that those who did not intend on claiming asylum in Hungary could not use the country as a stepping stone to wealthier parts of Europe. Unsurprisingly, as a result, the number of migrants making their way into Hungary was drastically cut.

However, it has been an expensive project. The building and maintenance of the 523-kilometre wall, which stretches along the Serbian and Croatian border, has cost the Hungarian taxpayer around 600 billion forints (€1.67 billion). Nevertheless, it has been successful and this year alone 92,000 illegal border crossings have been prevented.

Comment: Orban is proving there is a following that seeks autonomy, debate and choice.


Horse

Biden questions whether Americans 'understand' supply chain issues

Joe Biden
Biden's remarks came during a press conference as he answered a question from a reporter on criticism he has faced from Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.): "Nobody elected him to be F.D.R., they elected him to be normal and stop the chaos."

"I don't intend to be anybody but Joe Biden, that's who I am," Biden said, in response. "What I'm trying to do is do the things I ran on to do, and look, people out there are ordinary, hard-working Americans [who have been] through the wringer the last couple of years."

"People are worried," Biden added, before suggesting that people do not understand why "the price of agricultural products" has increased.

"If we were all going out and having lunch together and I said let's ask whoever's in the next table, no matter what restaurant we're in, have them explain the supply chain to us. Do you think they'd understand what we're talking about?" Biden asked.

Comment: Sleepy Joe is projecting his cognitive impairment and intellectual deficiencies onto the majority of Americans. People who probably know more about the supply chain and its issues than he does.


Stock Up

'Unprecedented shock': Bank of England 'very sorry' as cost of living soars

purse wallet spend
© Getty
The Bank of England governor has said he is "very sorry" that UK inflation is rising amid forecasts the cost of living could reach as much as 5%.


Comment: That's the 'official' rate. In real terms, it's at around 30%.


Andrew Bailey told the BBC that households were already feeling the impact of rising prices.

"I'm very sorry that's happening," he said. "None of us want to see that happen."

On Thursday, the Bank surprised financial markets by voting to keep the interest rate unchanged.

Comment: Then what bleeding use are you?

See also: And check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: Is The Government Hyping Shortages? And is 'Vaccination Shedding' Really a Thing?




Dollars

So who is in charge then?! Biden sez DOJ plans for $450K migrant separation payouts 'never gonna happen'

Biden 2 fingers
© Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
US President Joe Biden
President Biden flared in anger Saturday as he spoke in favor of his administration's plan to award $450,000 payments to migrants separated from their families after illegally crossing the US border — three days after he called a report on the payouts "garbage."

Blaming "the outrageous behavior of the last administration," Biden raised his voice and jabbed his finger at Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy, who asked about the administration's mixed messaging on the payout policy. Biden thundered:
"Whether [the border crossing] was legal or illegal, and you lost your child. You lost your child, it's gone — you deserve some kind of compensation, no matter what the circumstance. What that will be. I have no idea."
The Biden administration has been negotiating legal settlements with the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups that could shower up to $1 million per family on asylum seekers who were separated at the border under President Trump's "zero tolerance" illegal immigration policy.

"That's not gonna happen," Biden said flatly on Wednesday, when Doocy asked him about the initial report.

Comment: See also:

WH: Biden now 'perfectly comfortable' with migrant payouts - after calling $450K report 'garbage'


Chess

New Zealand PM refuses to say if China is 'ally or adversary' & abstains from calling US 'leading democracy'

Xi Jinping and Jacinda Ardern
© Kenzaburo Fukuhara / KYODONEWS via REUTERS
Xi Jinping and Jacinda Ardern meet in Beijing.
New Zealand won't be dragged into US hostilities with China, with which it has a 'mature' relationship that allows for disputes and differences to be resolved in a calm manner, PM Jacinda Ardern said.

Ardern was prompted several times to take a stance on the confrontation between the US and China during an interview with NBC's Chuck Todd. One question was whether New Zealanders see China as an "ally or adversary," to which the prime minister said her people will not "determine our relationship with any country in such stacked terms."

China is New Zealand's biggest trading partner, which, Ardern said, does not inhibit her country from criticizing Beijing when it sees fit.

Pirates

The Great Reset plans of a technocratic elite

global elite
In previous installments, I introduced the Great Reset idea1 and treated it in terms of its economic2 and ideological3 components. In this, the sixth installment, I will discuss what the Great Reset entails in terms of governance and the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4-IR), closing with remarks about the overall Great Reset project and its implications.

According to Klaus Schwab, the founder and executive chair of the World Economic Forum (WEF), the 4-IR follows the first, second, and third Industrial Revolutions — the mechanical, electrical, and digital, respectively.4 The 4-IR builds on the digital revolution, but Schwab sees the 4-IR as an exponential takeoff and convergence of existing and emerging fields, including Big Data; artificial intelligence; machine learning; quantum computing; and genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. The consequence is the merging of the physical, digital, and biological worlds. The blurring of these categories ultimately challenges the very ontologies by which we understand ourselves and the world, including "what it means to be human."5

The specific applications that make up the 4-R are too numerous and sundry to treat in full, but they include a ubiquitous internet, the internet of things, the internet of bodies, autonomous vehicles, smart cities, 3-D printing, nanotechnology, biotechnology, materials science, energy storage, and more.

MIB

Clinton operative linked to Steele Dossier failed to disclose work for Russia to Justice Department

Danchenko Dolan
© The Guardian/ipanews
Igor Danchenko • Charles Dolan
Charles Dolan's involvement in the dossier saga flips Democrats' allegations of Russian collusion on their head

The Clinton operative who provided information for the infamous Steele dossier worked for years for the Russian government and its state-owned gas giant Gazprom, though his activities are not disclosed in foreign agent filings with the Department of Justice.

Charles Dolan, a longtime Democratic operative and public-relations maven, worked as a senior consultant for the Russian government from 2006 to 2014 and in 2016 had extensive contacts with high-level Russian officials, according to an indictment unsealed Thursday by Special Counsel John Durham. Dolan in 2016 also fed information to Igor Danchenko, a Russian analyst who served as the primary source for Christopher Steele, a former British spy who investigated Donald Trump on behalf of the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. During the years he worked for Russia, Dolan was not registered with the Justice Department under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, according to a review of government records.

Comment:


Arrow Down

Words matter: Italian Institute of Health drastically reduces its official Covid death toll number

Italy protest vaccines
© NurPhoto via Getty Images
Italians protest against covid restrictions
Changes definition of COVID death from 'with COVID' to 'by COVID'.

The Italian Higher Institute of Health has drastically reduced the country's official COVID death toll number by over 97 per cent after changing the definition of a fatality to someone who died from COVID rather than with COVID.

Italian newspaper Il Tempo reports that the Institute has revised downward the number of people who have died from COVID rather than with COVID from 130,000 to under 4,000.

"Yes, you read that right. Turns out 97.1% of deaths hitherto attributed to Covid were not due directly to Covid," writes Toby Young.

Of the of the 130,468 deaths registered as official COVID deaths since the start of the pandemic, only 3,783 are directly attributable to the virus alone.

Comment: